‘Bigger Than Watergate’? Both Sides Say Yes, but for Different Reasons

WASHINGTON — President Trump and his critics actually agree on something. If a column he read in a magazine is correct, he wrote on Twitter on Thursday, “this is bigger than Watergate!”

Never mind that he was thinking of something different than his adversaries when they use the same phrase. Mr. Trump was referring to what he deems a deep-state conspiracy to get him. His detractors are referring to the various scandals swirling around Mr. Trump.

Watergate has long been the touchstone for modern American scandal, the mountain of misconduct against which all others are judged. In the 44 years since Richard M. Nixon resigned, virtually every political investigation has been likened to the one that brought down a president, the suffix “gate” applied to all sorts of public flaps, no matter how significant or trivial.

But rarely has the comparison been as intense and persistent as during the 16 months since Mr. Trump took office — a comparison deployed by both sides in hopes of shaping the narrative of wrongdoing. What started out as an inquiry into Russia’s meddling in the 2016 election has mushroomed into questions of perjury, obstruction of justice, conspiracy, abuse of power, illicit spying, hush money, tax fraud, money laundering and influence peddling.

Depending on what is eventually proven, the core scandal could rival Watergate, in which a “third-rate burglary” of Democratic National Committee headquarters ultimately revealed a wide-ranging campaign of political sabotage and spying to influence the 1972 presidential election and undercut perceived rivals. In the current case, a hostile foreign power sought to sway the 2016 election and there is evidence that at least some people in Mr. Trump’s circle were willing to collaborate with it to do so.

Mr. Nixon ordered the firing of Archibald Cox, the Watergate special prosecutor, and was ultimately undone by a secret tape recording of him requesting that his aides use the C.I.A. to impede the F.B.I. investigation into the burglary. Mr. Trump fired James B. Comey, the F.B.I. director originally leading the investigation, and has repeatedly pressured the Justice Department and special counsel to shut down the inquiry and investigate his Democratic rivals instead.

Like Hillary Clinton and the “vast right wing conspiracy,” Mr. Trump and his allies are trying to focus attention on the conduct of their pursuers, arguing that the F.B.I. or the special counsel investigating Russia’s involvement in the election have themselves stepped over the line. The president’s tweet on Thursday seized on a column in a conservative magazine asserting that the F.B.I. most likely had a confidential informant inside Mr. Trump’s campaign in 2016.

Mr. Trump extrapolated that to imply that his predecessor, President Barack Obama, had planted a spy on his team. “Wow, word seems to be coming out that the Obama FBI ‘SPIED ON THE TRUMP CAMPAIGN WITH AN EMBEDDED INFORMANT,’” he wrote. “If so,” he added, “this is bigger than Watergate!”

Neither the original column by Andrew C. McCarthy in National Review nor a follow-up directly claimed that Mr. Obama or any of his political appointees had anything to do with the “spy” even if the F.B.I. did have an informant. But that theory fits the larger case that a politically compromised intelligence apparatus manufactured an investigation.

The president has advanced the premise in sometimes sensational and uncorroborated ways, as when he accused Mr. Obama of wiretapping Trump Tower, an assertion dismissed by Mr. Trump’s own Justice Department. But questions persist about the F.B.I.’s use of a dossier financed by Mrs. Clinton’s campaign and the Democrats to obtain a secret warrant against an adviser to Mr. Trump.

To Mr. Trump’s allies, that was, yes, bigger than Watergate. “Our sources are telling us that the abuse of power is far bigger than Watergate,” Sean Hannity, the Fox News host and friend of Mr. Trump’s, said in January. “I have long said it is worse than Watergate,” agreed Representative Steve King, Republican of Iowa.

Mr. Trump’s theory of the case has been bolstered by some investigators who have gotten in trouble. Two former members of the team working for the special counsel, Robert S. Mueller III, wrote text messages that expressed political views critical of Mr. Trump. Andrew G. McCabe, the former deputy F.B.I. director, was fired for not being forthcoming with an inspector general looking into his conduct.

The bigger-than-Watergate analogy, of course, is one of the most overused tropes in American politics. To hear some tell it, Chappaquiddick, Iran-contra, the Keating Five, Whitewater, the Bill Clinton-Monica Lewinsky scandal and the C.I.A. leak case were all worse than Watergate. George W. Bush’s whole presidency was “Worse Than Watergate,” according to the title of a 2004 book written by none other than John Dean, the Watergate figure. Politico actually tabulated 46 scandals or other furors that have been declared worse than Watergate.

Among the most prolific purveyors of bigger-than-Watergate comparisons has been Mr. Trump.

In seeking to undercut the legitimacy of the current investigation, Mr. Trump seized on the first anniversary of Mr. Mueller’s appointment on Thursday to denounce it as a politically inspired waste of time and resources, in some ways echoing Mr. Nixon who at a similar point declared that “one year of Watergate is enough.”

“Congratulations America,” Mr. Trump wrote, “we are now into the second year of the greatest Witch Hunt in American History...and there is still No Collusion and No Obstruction. The only Collusion was that done by Democrats who were unable to win an Election despite the spending of far more money!”

Mr. Trump has made a point of saying again and again that there was “no collusion,” but as documents released this week make clear, there was at the very least attempted collusion. His son Donald Trump Jr.; his son-in-law, Jared Kushner; and his campaign chairman, Paul Manafort, met with Russian visitors during the campaign after being promised incriminating information about Mrs. Clinton as “part of Russia and its government’s support for Mr. Trump.”

The Trump team members said the meeting did not yield the dirt on Mrs. Clinton that they had hoped for, but they were willing to meet with visitors advertised as working on behalf of the Russian government to get it. They have argued that there was nothing wrong with this because any campaign would be eager to obtain damaging information about an opponent.

In marking the anniversary of Mr. Mueller’s appointment, Mr. Trump was returning to his argument that the inquiry had now gone on too long, a complaint made by other presidents under scrutiny. But it can be much worse. The Watergate investigation took more than two years from the burglary to Mr. Nixon’s resignation. Whitewater lasted six years and Iran-contra seven.

An exception was Kenneth W. Starr’s investigation into Mr. Clinton’s false statements under oath about his affair with Ms. Lewinsky, an inquiry that took just eight months. But speed was not much comfort to Mr. Clinton since it ended with an impeachment referral to Congress.

A version of this article appears in print on , on Page A16 of the New York edition with the headline: Worse Than Watergate? Both Sides Say Yes, For Different Reasons. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe